The idea has been floated and endlessly reintroduced in legislation
since the founding of the United States of creating a Department of
Peace. These efforts even resulted in 1986 in the creation of the USI"P"
-- the U.S. Institute of "Peace" which this week held events with
Lindsey Graham, Tom Cotton, Madeleine Albright, Chuck Hagel, William
Perry, Stephen Hadley, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Susan Rice, John Kerry, and
Michael Flynn, and which in 2015 rejected proposals
from the peace movement to have anything to do with advocating for
peace. So the push to create a Department of Peace rolls on, generally
ignoring the existence of the USI"P."

I try to imagine what a senate confirmation hearing would look like
for a nominee for Secretary of Peace. I picture the nominee being rolled
in by his attendants and the questioning beginning something like this:

"General Smith, thank you for your service. What year was it, do you
recall, that you designed your first missile, and was that prior to or
following the Wright Brothers' flight at Kitty Hawk? Thank you for your
service, by the way."

"Senator, it was that very same day, and to -- cough! -- excuse me, to give full credit there was a colored boy who helped me do it. Now what was his name?"

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But the trick is to imagine a nominee mistakenly or magically chosen
who would actually be qualified for the job. Now I imagine him or her
walking into the hearing room. Some of the questioning might go like
this:

"Ms. Jones, what do you think ought to have been done when the Russians invaded Ukraine and stole Crimea?"

"I think a U.S. Russian meeting with the following as the top 10 items on the U.S. agenda:

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Recognition of Russian suffering during World War II, including
understanding of the impact of the years-long U.S. delay while they died
by the tens of millions.

Appreciation for Russia's agreement on German reunification along
with the U.S. commitment at that time not to expand NATO as it has gone
ahead and done.

Apology for facilitating a violent coup in Kiev, and commitment to
refraining from all constraint on Ukrainian self-determination.

A proposal to withdraw U.S. troops and weapons from all of Europe,
to disband NATO, to end foreign arms sales and gifts, and to abolish
U.S. nuclear weapons.

A request that Russia reciprocate.

A plan for a new, internationally monitored, vote in Crimea on whether to rejoin Russia.

A . . . "

"Ms. Jones, you might wish to surrender to the forces of evil, but I
have no intention of supporting such measures. Ms. Jones, have you or
anyone in your family ever served your country in the United States
military?"

The real trick, however, would be to imagine a qualified nominee and a qualified senate. Then we might get:

"Mr. Garcia, what steps would you advocate to reduce the use of war?"

"Senator, we might begin by ceasing to arm the poor countries where
all the wars take place but where none of the weapons are manufactured.
The U.S. is the top arms dealer in the world and along with five other
countries accounts for the vast majority of it. When weapons sales rise,
violence follows. Similarly, the record is clear that when the United
States spends its own money on militarism, more wars -- not fewer --
result. We need a program of transition from violent industries to
peaceful industries, which is good for the economy and the environment
as well. And we need a program of transition from hostile foreign policy
to one of cooperation and aid. We could become the most loved country
in the world by providing the planet with schools and tools and clean
energy for a fraction of what we spend now on a vicious cycle of
armament and war that makes us less safe, not more secure."

"Mr. Garcia, I'd like to see you confirmed. I hope you're celibate
and willing at least to pretend to be religious, because even in this
fantasy you are still dealing with the United States Senate after all."

A fantasy it may be, but I am inclined to consider it a valuable one.
That is to say, we ought to be encouraging everyone we can to imagine
what it would be like to have a Department of Peace, even though the
current U.S. government would turn such a Department into a blood-soaked
Orwellian travesty. In years gone by I agreed to be named "Secretary of
Peace" in the Green Shadow Cabinet. But we never did much with it. I
think a whole shadow Department of Peace should be modeling sane
alternatives to actual government policy, expanding the range of actual
corporate media debate. This is in some ways what we try to do at World Beyond War.

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I recommend a small book, edited by William Benzon, called We Need a Department of Peace: Everybody's Business, Nobody's Job.
That slogan refers to the idea that we all have a powerful interest in
peace, but we don't have anybody working on it -- at least not in the way
in which we have millions of people employed with public dollars in the
pursuit of more wars. The book collects statements advocating for a
Department of Peace over many years, beginning with Benjamin Rush's 1793
"Plan of a Peace-Office for the United States," which was published by
Benjamin Banneker.

Some of these pieces of writing date from periods in which people
could claim that Christianity is the only peaceful religion or that
there is no organized opposition to a Department of Peace or that only
bringing peoples under a larger empire can establish peace -- or could
quote Abraham Lincoln arguing for war as an inspirational message for
peace. Most of this stuff can be mentally updated as you read, because
the basic wisdom of establishing an office to pursue peace is only
strengthened when one reads it in voices from other cultural
perspectives.

There is, however, a sticking point for me that doesn't seem to slide
off so easily. The authors of this book maintain that the State
Department and the War (or "Defense") Department both serve good useful
purposes that should coexist alongside a Department of Peace. They
propose dividing duties. For example, the State Department could form
bilateral agreements, and the Peace Department multilateral agreements.
But if the Department of Peace asks a nation to sign a disarmament
treaty, and the Department of State asks that nation to buy U.S.-made
weapons, isn't there a conflict? And all the more so, if the Department
of War bombs a country while the Department of State is sending it
doctors, isn't there a contradiction to be found in the coffins shipped
back containing doctors' bodies?

David Swanson is the author of "When the World Outlawed War," "War Is A Lie" and "Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union." He blogs at http://davidswanson.org and http://warisacrime.org and works for the online (more...)